This publication includes digest and history for bills, joint memorials, joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, initiatives, and substitutes. Engrossed measures may be republished if the amendment makes a substantive change. Electronic versions of Legislative Digests are available at http://apps.leg.wa.gov/billinfo/digests.aspx?year=2015. HB 1068-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Kagi, Appleton, Gregerson, Reykdal, Carlyle, Stanford, Sawyer, Fitzgibbon, Jinkins, Cody, Hudgins, Senn, Clibborn, Moeller, Riccelli, Moscoso, Farrell, and Fey) Concerning sexual assault examination kits. Requires a law enforcement agency, when it receives a sexual assault examination kit, and consent has been given by the victim or the victim's parent or legal guardian to analyze the kit as part of a sexual assault investigation, to submit a request for laboratory examination to the Washington state patrol crime laboratory for prioritization for testing by it or another accredited laboratory that holds an outsourcing agreement with the Washington state patrol.Creates a work group to determine the number of untested sexual assault examination kits and make recommendations regarding strategies for reducing the number of untested sexual assault examination kits in the state.Expires June 30, 2018.
HB 1148-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representative Goodman) Determining sentences for multiple offenses and enhancements. Determines sentences for multiple offenses and enhancements.
HB 1700 by Representatives Riccelli, Manweller, Robinson, Harris, Gregerson, and Ormsby Concerning qualified health plan claims in grace periods. Requires an issuer of a qualified health plan to reimburse a health care provider or a health care facility for all nonfraudulent claims for service provided to an enrollee during a grace period.Requires the governing board of the state health benefit exchange to certify a plan as a qualified health plan to be offered through the exchange if the plan is determined by the board to ensure adherence to the terms of the contract between the qualified health plan issuer and a health care provider or health care facility.Requires the state health benefit exchange, before terminating the coverage of an enrollee receiving advance payments of the premium tax credit, to conduct outreach to ensure that enrollees who are late in making premium payments are aware that they may be eligible for medicaid coverage or for an increased subsidy level in the exchange.
HB 1701 by Representatives Moscoso, Walsh, Haler, Jinkins, Reykdal, S. Hunt, Blake, Riccelli, Ortiz-Self, Walkinshaw, Tharinger, Appleton, Sells, Gregerson, Santos, Farrell, and Ormsby Prohibiting employers from asking about arrests or convictions before an applicant is determined otherwise qualified for a position. Establishes the Washington fair chance act.Prohibits an employer from including any question on an application for employment, from inquiring either orally or in writing, from receiving information through a criminal history background check, or from otherwise obtaining information about an applicant's arrests or convictions before having determined that the applicant is otherwise qualified for the position.Authorizes the state to: (1) Educate the public about this act and disseminate information about it; and(2) Form an advisory body representing the views of a broad variety of stakeholders to provide recommendations regarding improved enforcement of this act.
HB 1702 by Representatives Moscoso, Vick, Ryu, Kochmar, Blake, McCabe, Hurst, Stanford, Kagi, Young, and Griffey Addressing local authority in the regulation of fireworks. Authorizes a county or a city to enact an ordinance that is more restrictive than state law as to the days and hours of legal sale of consumer fireworks, the days and hours of legal use of consumer fireworks, and types of consumer fireworks that may be sold and used within the geographical boundary of that county or city.
HB 1703 by Representatives Santos and Pollet; by request of Office of Financial Management Modifying the high school assessment system by changing the administration of alternative assessments, continuing the requirement for students to demonstrate achievement of state academic standards to earn a high school diploma, and aligning the system with career and college ready graduation requirements. Implements a more efficient assessment system and provides additional pathways for students to demonstrate academic proficiency required for graduation.Eliminates the statewide end-of-course assessments for high school mathematics and the tenth grade assessments for reading and writing and English language arts.Requires the office of the superintendent of public instruction to develop a college readiness transition course in science to be piloted in high schools.Requires the superintendent of public instruction to offer an online version of the college readiness transition course in mathematics, English, and science through the digital learning department online course offerings.
HB 1704 by Representatives Pettigrew, Haler, Reykdal, Zeiger, Tarleton, Sells, Pollet, Klippert, Appleton, Goodman, Santos, Fey, and Hudgins Enhancing public safety and reducing recidivism through postsecondary education. Authorizes postsecondary education and training of incarcerated adults through expanded partnerships between the community and technical colleges and the department of corrections.Specifies that an inmate may be selected to participate in a state-funded postsecondary education degree program, based on priority determined by the department of corrections.Requires the department of corrections, in coordination with the state board for community and technical colleges, to submit a report to the office of financial management and the appropriate fiscal and policy committees of the legislature that evaluates the department's postsecondary education program.
HB 1705 by Representatives Haler, Reykdal, Tarleton, Zeiger, Sells, and Pollet; by request of State Board for Community and Technical Colleges Concerning basic education for adults at community and technical colleges. Requires state appropriations to the state board for community and technical colleges to include a separate appropriation to provide basic education for adults.Requires the caseload forecast council to estimate the anticipated number of full-time equivalent students who will enroll in basic education for adults courses in community and technical colleges and submit the forecast to the governor and members of the legislative fiscal committees.
HB 1706 by Representatives Stanford, Zeiger, Reykdal, Haler, Tarleton, Hayes, Sells, Stambaugh, Klippert, Smith, and Gregerson; by request of State Board for Community and Technical Colleges Authorizing waivers of building fees and services and activities fees for certain military service members. Authorizes the governing boards of the community and technical colleges, the state universities, the regional universities, and The Evergreen State College to waive all or a portion of building fees and services and activities fees not covered by the United States department of defense tuition assistance program for military service members eligible to participate in the program.
HB 1707 by Representatives Takko, Dent, and Fagan Concerning irrigation district administration. Modifies irrigation district provisions relating to legal action to foreclose assessment liens.
HB 1708 by Representatives Dent, Takko, Fagan, and Nealey Clarifying that irrigation district facilities are not within the definition of shorelands. Clarifies that irrigation ditches, canals, and drainage and other return flow conveyances are not within the definition of "shorelands" or "shoreland areas" for purposes of the shoreline management act.
HB 1709 by Representatives Springer, Kretz, Takko, Pike, Wilcox, and Fitzgibbon Establishing a process for the payment of impact fees through provisions stipulated in recorded covenants. Requires counties, cities, and towns collecting impact fees to adopt a permanent system for the collection of impact fees from applicants for certain residential building permits.Allows counties, cities, and towns to adopt local systems for the collection of impact fees that differ from the aforementioned requirements.
HB 1710 by Representatives Tarleton, Walkinshaw, McBride, Ortiz-Self, Sawyer, Peterson, Gregerson, and Hudgins Fostering economic growth in Washington by supporting the in-state production, processing, and distribution of food supply. Requires the Washington State University center for sustaining agriculture and natural resources to study the economic development of the local food system in the state.Requires Washington State University to form an advisory committee to provide technical information, advice, and assistance in completing the study.Makes appropriations.Provides that section 2 of this act is null and void if appropriations are not approved.Expires December 31, 2016.
HB 1711 by Representatives Senn, Condotta, Takko, G. Hunt, Gregerson, Tarleton, and Ormsby Concerning criteria for bidders on public works contracts. Addresses bidder responsibility supplemental criteria for public works contracts.
HB 1712 by Representatives Harris, Riccelli, Rodne, Van De Wege, and Caldier Concerning audit procedures to assist medicaid providers. Requires the director of the state health care authority to establish and publish, on the authority's web site, audit protocols to assist medicaid providers in developing programs to improve compliance with medicaid requirements under state and federal laws.
HB 1713 by Representatives Cody, Harris, Jinkins, Moeller, Tharinger, Appleton, Ortiz-Self, and Pollet Integrating the treatment systems for mental health and chemical dependency. Requires the secretary of the department of social and health services to combine the functions of a designated mental health professional and designated chemical dependency specialist by establishing a designated crisis responder who is authorized to conduct investigations, detain persons up to seventy-two hours to the proper facility, and carry out the other functions identified in chapter 71.05 RCW (mental illness) and chapter 71.34 RCW (mental health services for minors).Requires the behavioral health organizations to provide training to the designated crisis responders.Requires the state institute for public policy to evaluate the effect of the integration of the involuntary treatment systems for chemical dependency and mental health and make preliminary reports to appropriate committees of the legislature.
HB 1714 by Representatives Manweller and Bergquist Concerning the achievement index rating system. Requires the state board of education to revise its annual school rating system for the Washington achievement index to weigh various performance indicators.
HB 1715 by Representatives Peterson, Fitzgibbon, and S. Hunt; by request of Department of Health Protecting Puget Sound through funding and implementing local on-site sewage program management plans. Requires the local board of health in the twelve counties bordering Puget Sound to collect a minimum charge of thirty dollars annually for each on-site sewage system located in the Puget Sound basin for the purpose of implementing the on-site sewage program management plan.Authorizes the local board of health to collect the on-site sewage system charge in areas of the county located outside the Puget Sound basin.Prohibits the local board of health from: (1) Retroactively collecting the on-site sewage system charge; and(2) Collecting the on-site sewage system charge to finance on-site sewage management plan services already paid for by other fees, rates, or charges.Authorizes counties and the department of health, in order to assist homeowners with the repair and replacement of on-site sewage systems, to consult with the department of ecology to capitalize and administer a sustainable unified low-interest loan program through the department of ecology's established water quality financial assistance program.
HB 1716 by Representatives Moscoso, Appleton, Sells, Ortiz-Self, Robinson, Jinkins, Gregerson, Ryu, Peterson, Walkinshaw, Santos, Pollet, and Farrell Addressing state and local enforcement of federal immigration detainers and administrative warrants. Establishes the Washington family unity act.Addresses state and local enforcement of federal immigration detainers and administrative warrants.
HB 1717 by Representatives Sawyer, Walsh, Kagi, Lytton, Ortiz-Self, Goodman, Buys, Farrell, and Ormsby Concerning children's advocacy centers. Addresses children's advocacy centers.
HB 1718 by Representatives Ormsby, Kilduff, Sullivan, Hayes, Tharinger, MacEwen, Sawyer, Zeiger, Walsh, Rodne, Hudgins, Van De Wege, Appleton, Muri, Reykdal, Tarleton, and Pollet Authorizing membership in the Washington public safety employees' retirement system for employees who provide nursing care to, or ensure the custody and safety of, offender, probationary, and patient populations in institutions and centers. Revises the following definitions for purposes of the public safety employees' retirement system: (1) "Employer" to include the department of veterans affairs and the department of social and health services; and(2) "Member" to include certain employees whose primary responsibility is to provide nursing care to or ensure the custody and safety of offender, probationary, or patient populations.
HB 1719 by Representatives Robinson, Cody, and Tharinger; by request of Department of Health Concerning the registration and disciplining of pharmacy assistants. Addresses the registration and disciplining of pharmacy assistants.
HB 1720 by Representatives Robinson, Peterson, Stanford, Riccelli, Gregerson, Senn, Appleton, Ortiz-Self, Tarleton, Jinkins, and Santos Concerning healthy housing. Addresses healthy housing improvements to increase the health and safety of a home by integrating energy efficiency activities and indoor environmental quality measures, consistent with the weatherization plus health initiative of the federal department of energy and the healthy housing principles adopted by the federal department of housing and urban development.
HB 1721 by Representatives Robinson, Schmick, Cody, Harris, Riccelli, and Van De Wege Concerning the transport of patients by ambulance to facilities other than hospitals. Requires the department of health, in consultation with the department of social and health services, to convene a work group comprised of members of the steering committee and representatives of ambulance services, mental health providers, and chemical dependency treatment programs to establish alternative facility guidelines for the development of protocols and procedures for the appropriate transport of patients in need of immediate mental health or chemical dependency services.Requires the state health care authority to develop a reimbursement methodology for ambulance services when transporting a medical assistance enrollee to a mental health facility or chemical dependency program.
HB 1722 by Representatives Hayes, Blake, Sawyer, Manweller, Takko, Shea, Rodne, Taylor, McCaslin, and MacEwen Concerning the manufacture and repair of short-barreled rifles. Addresses exemptions from short-barreled rifle requirements.
HB 1723 by Representatives Hayes, Hurst, Harmsworth, Takko, Rodne, Griffey, Pettigrew, and Wilson Allowing booking photographs and electronic images at jails to be open to the public. Requires certain booking photographs and information at jails to be open to the public.
HB 1724 by Representatives Walkinshaw, S. Hunt, Ortiz-Self, Fey, Fitzgibbon, Bergquist, Hansen, Tharinger, Senn, Tarleton, Robinson, Appleton, Reykdal, Gregerson, Pollet, Farrell, Van De Wege, Ormsby, and Hudgins Providing prepaid postage for primary and general election ballots. Requires return envelopes for primary and general election ballots to include prepaid postage.Requires the state to reimburse counties for the cost of return postage on mail and absentee ballots for primary and general elections.
HB 1725 by Representatives Cody and Tharinger; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Concerning a consumer's right to assign hours to individual providers and the department of social and health services' authority to establish criteria regarding the payment of individual providers. Addresses a consumer's right to assign hours to individual providers and the department of social and health services' authority to establish criteria regarding the payment of individual providers.
HB 1726 by Representatives Moeller, Jinkins, Tharinger, and Appleton; by request of Department of Social and Health Services Modifying certain definitions concerning the abuse of vulnerable adults. Modifies abuse of vulnerable adult provisions relating to the definitions of "abuse" and "restraints."
HB 1727 by Representatives Schmick, Cody, and Short Permitting nursing assistants to perform simple care tasks under indirect supervision. Authorizes a nursing assistant, employed in a health care facility that provides services in a health professional shortage area, to take and record blood pressure and vital signs under the indirect supervision of a registered nurse or a licensed practical nurse.
HB 1728 by Representatives Ormsby, Walsh, Ortiz-Self, Senn, Kagi, S. Hunt, Farrell, Dent, Zeiger, and Gregerson Creating the parents for parents program. Specifies that the parents for parents program currently exists in seven counties and has been shown to increase the number of family reunifications, where appropriate, while decreasing the length of time needed to establish permanence. The goal is to: (1) Continue to support the program in those counties;(2) Standardize the parents for parents curriculum among counties in which it is currently used; and(3) Replicate the program statewide by the end of the 2019-2021 biennium.Requires the parents for parents program to provide structured peer mentoring, administered by veteran parents, for families entering the dependency court system.Requires funding for the parents for parents program to be through the office of public defense and centrally administered through a pass-through to a state nonprofit-lead organization that has extensive experience supporting veteran parents.Requires a child welfare research entity based at the University of Washington to conduct an evaluation of the parents for parents program.
HB 1729 by Representatives Pettigrew, Magendanz, Kagi, Walsh, Van De Wege, DeBolt, Jinkins, Goodman, Dunshee, Hudgins, Wylie, Cody, Sawyer, Senn, Moeller, Tarleton, and Santos Concerning the administration of a statewide network of community-based domestic violence victim services by the department of social and health services. Requires the department of social and health services to develop and maintain a plan for: (1) Delivering domestic violence victim services, prevention efforts, and access to emergency shelter across the state; and(2) Providing a statewide toll-free information and referral hotline or other statewide accessible information and referral service for victims of domestic violence.Increases funding for the domestic violence prevention account.
HB 1730 by Representatives Kirby and Vick Concerning the handling of earnest money. Addresses the requirements of a holder of earnest money.
HB 1731 by Representatives Ormsby, Riccelli, Walkinshaw, Fitzgibbon, and Jinkins Creating a protocol for the return of firearms in the possession of law enforcement agencies. Establishes the Sheena Henderson act.Requires law enforcement agencies to: (1) Before returning a privately owned firearm, confirm that the individual to whom the firearm will be returned is the individual from whom the firearm was obtained or an authorized representative of that person and that he or she is eligible to possess a firearm; and(2) Develop a notification protocol that allows a family or household member to use an incident or case number to request to be notified when a law enforcement agency returns a privately owned firearm.
HB 1732 by Representatives Reykdal, Riccelli, Ryu, S. Hunt, Peterson, Ormsby, Stanford, Goodman, Cody, Tharinger, Ortiz-Self, Bergquist, Fitzgibbon, Farrell, Sullivan, Dunshee, Moscoso, Appleton, Sells, Pollet, Robinson, Walkinshaw, Jinkins, Senn, Wylie, Lytton, Hudgins, Tarleton, Kagi, Moeller, Sawyer, Fey, Pettigrew, Gregerson, Orwall, Santos, Kirby, McBride, Takko, Gregory, Clibborn, Springer, Van De Wege, Blake, Kilduff, and Hansen Addressing meal and rest breaks and mandatory overtime for certain health care employees. Addresses meals and rest periods for licensed practical nurses, registered nurses, surgical technologists, diagnostic radiologic technologists, cardiovascular invasive specialists, respiratory care practitioners, and nursing assistants-certified.Prohibits an employer, acting directly or indirectly in the interest of a health care facility, from: (1) Using prescheduled on-call time to fill chronic or foreseeable staff shortages; and(2) Scheduling nonemergency procedures that would require overtime.
HB 1733 by Representatives Cody, Ryu, S. Hunt, Peterson, Jinkins, Goodman, Ortiz-Self, Hudgins, Reykdal, Walkinshaw, Wylie, Fitzgibbon, Farrell, Sullivan, Bergquist, Dunshee, Moscoso, Appleton, Sells, Pollet, Riccelli, Robinson, Senn, Ormsby, Lytton, Tarleton, Sawyer, Moeller, Fey, Pettigrew, Gregerson, Orwall, Santos, Kirby, McBride, Takko, Gregory, Clibborn, Van De Wege, Tharinger, and Kagi Concerning nursing staffing practices at hospitals. Establishes the Washington state patient safety act.Requires the department of health to: (1) With stakeholder input, adopt patient assignment limits and recommend quality indicators;(2) Upon receipt of a complaint, conduct an audit of a hospital's compliance with this act and investigate complaints of violations of this act; and(3) Maintain, for public inspection, records of civil penalties, administrative actions, or license suspensions or revocations imposed on hospitals.Requires a hospital to: (1) Submit a staffing plan to the department of health on at least an annual basis, implement the staffing plan, and assign nursing personnel to each patient care unit in accordance with the plan; and(2) Regularly collect information regarding nurse staffing and submit it to the department of health semiannually.
HB 1734 by Representatives Kagi, Walsh, Rodne, Fey, Jinkins, Pettigrew, Carlyle, and McBride Creating the one family one team public-private innovation demonstration. Requires the administrative office of the courts to participate in the one family one team public-private partnership, a nongovernmental public-private partnership that supports innovation in dependency court proceedings.Creates the one family one team public-private partnership account.
HB 1735 by Representatives Orwall, Kagi, Carlyle, Gregerson, Pollet, and Ormsby Concerning extended foster care services. Addresses the maintenance of a dependency proceeding for the delivery of extended foster care services for any youth who is dependent in foster care at the age of eighteen years and who, at the time of his or her eighteenth birthday, is unable to meet specified requirements due to a medical condition.Requires the children's administration to invite representatives from the division of behavioral health and recovery, the disability services administration, the economic services administration, and the juvenile justice and rehabilitation administration to the youth's shared planning meeting that is used to develop a transition plan for youth who will be aging out of foster care.
HB 1736 by Representatives Orcutt, Blake, Pike, Vick, Harris, Wilson, Young, Takko, Muri, and Buys Extending specific aerospace tax preferences to include other types of commercial aircraft to encourage the migration of good wage jobs in the state. Provides a preferential business and occupation tax rate, business and occupation tax credit, and sales and use tax deferral for the manufacturing of rotorcraft, including the components used in the manufacturing process.
HB 1737 by Representatives Orcutt, Santos, Magendanz, Bergquist, Ortiz-Self, Kilduff, Kagi, Zeiger, Tarleton, Muri, Condotta, and Pollet Addressing the availability of retired teachers as substitutes. Authorizes certain teachers in plan 2 or plan 3 of the teachers' retirement system that have retired under alternate early retirement provisions to be employed with an employer for up to two hundred sixteen hours per school year without suspension of their benefit.
HB 1738 by Representatives Orcutt, Clibborn, Hayes, Fey, Hargrove, Farrell, Zeiger, Moscoso, Muri, Condotta, Buys, and Harmsworth Concerning marine, off-road recreational vehicle, and snowmobile fuel tax refunds based on actual fuel taxes paid. Restores the refund percentages of fuel tax purchases made by boaters, off-road vehicle riders, and snowmobilers into nonhighway-purpose accounts established to benefit nonhighway users of fuel.Declares it is the legislature's intent to honor its commitment when the refund amounts from nonhighway-purpose fuel tax purchases are no longer necessary to repay bonded debt associated with the 2003 and 2005 motor vehicle fuel tax increases.Specifies that as of July 1, 2031, the state will apply the total percentage of nonhighway-purpose fuel tax refunds into the proper nonhighway user accounts for boaters, off-road vehicle riders, and snowmobilers.
HB 1739 by Representatives Carlyle, Walsh, Orwall, Magendanz, Appleton, Fitzgibbon, Hunter, Peterson, S. Hunt, Gregerson, Jinkins, Goodman, Pollet, Farrell, Ormsby, Hudgins, and Cody Reducing criminal justice expenses by eliminating the death penalty in favor of life incarceration. Eliminates the death penalty in favor of life incarceration.
HB 1740 by Representatives Appleton and Ryu Addressing political subdivisions purchasing health coverage through the public employees' benefits board program. Addresses the purchase, by political subdivisions, of health care coverage through the public employees' benefits board program.
HB 1741 by Representatives Kretz, Blake, and Condotta Allowing disabled persons to access public recreational sites or lands without a discover pass, vehicle access pass, or day-use permit. Authorizes persons who display a disability pass for free admission to state parks, or who display a card, decal, or special license plate issued for a permanent disability, to access public recreational sites and lands without a discover pass, a vehicle access pass, or a day-use permit.
HB 1742 by Representatives Lytton, Young, Pettigrew, Stokesbary, Zeiger, Magendanz, Shea, Taylor, Caldier, Griffey, Gregerson, Condotta, Buys, and McCaslin; by request of Department of Agriculture Changing cottage food operation provisions. Changes the maximum annual gross sales amount of cottage food products to twenty-five thousand dollars.Allows the department of agriculture to increase that amount in rule.
HB 1743 by Representatives Lytton, Pollet, Sells, Stanford, Kagi, Reykdal, and Tarleton Concerning the acceptance of additional high school equivalency tests. Requires the state board for community and technical colleges to identify at least one high school equivalency test option that: (1) Is low cost to the student;(2) Does not require computer proficiency; and(3) Is appropriate for students who have been in the workforce, need a high school diploma for employment reasons, have been incarcerated or in the military, have been removed from any academic environment for four years or more, or are not planning to pursue a college education.
HB 1744 by Representative Appleton; by request of Department of Corrections Modifying provisions governing inmate funds subject to deductions. Exempts from certain deduction requirements, money received by the department of corrections on behalf of an inmate from family or other outside sources for the payment of certain medical expenses.
HJR 4206 by Representatives Orcutt, Hurst, G. Hunt, Vick, Wilson, Pike, Shea, Taylor, Hargrove, Condotta, Buys, and McCaslin Placing restrictions on tax increases. Proposes an amendment to the state Constitution to place restrictions on tax increases.
SB 5009-S by Senate Committee on Commerce & Labor (originally sponsored by Senators Hobbs, Braun, and Conway) Concerning self-service storage facilities. Modifies provisions relating to notification requirements to occupants by the owner of a self-service storage facility.
SB 5025-S by Senate Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Senators Rivers, Cleveland, and Benton) Modifying the apportionment of quick title service fees collected by appointed subagents. Addresses disbursement of quick title service fees collected by subagents appointed by the director of the department of licensing.
SB 5078-S by Senate Committee on Human Services, Mental Health & Housing (originally sponsored by Senators O'Ban, Darneille, and Warnick) Funding recovery programs for persons with mental illness and chemical dependency disorders. Requires twenty-two percent of the funds distributed to the basic health plan trust account from marijuana excise taxes and certain fees, penalties, and forfeitures from marijuana producer, processor, and retailer licenses to be used to fund evidence-based or research-based community interventions shown to promote recovery and reduce the need for inpatient hospitalization, involuntary commitment, or criminal justice involvement for persons with mental illness or persons with co-occurring mental illness and chemical dependency disorders.
SB 5261-S by Senate Committee on Human Services, Mental Health & Housing (originally sponsored by Senators O'Ban, Conway, Darneille, and Chase) Concerning community policing at and around western state hospital. Requires western state hospital to enter into a contract with the city in which it is located for the provision of community policing services at the hospital and in the surrounding areas.
SB 5627 by Senators Bailey, Pearson, and Warnick Concerning an exemption from discover pass requirements for off-road vehicles. Exempts vehicles displaying a valid off-road vehicle decal from discover pass requirements at locations where off-road vehicle activity is allowed.
SB 5628 by Senators Honeyford, Hatfield, Braun, Hobbs, Warnick, and Chase Providing for storm water, flood control, and water supply infrastructure in the state. Establishes the Washington waters act.Requires the department of ecology to administer the provisions of this act to significantly reduce risks to public health and safety, economy, and environmental vitality by evaluating, ranking, and funding projects that affect a broad geographic area and are consistent with: (1) Reducing storm water pollution from existing infrastructure and development;(2) Reducing the risk of flooding, protecting against damage caused by floods, and protecting or restoring naturally functioning areas where floods occur; and(3) Improving the availability and reliability of water supplies for instream and out-of-stream uses.Creates a statewide annual special benefit assessment to provide storm water, flood control, and water supply infrastructure throughout the state.Creates the water infrastructure account.Provides for submission of this act to a vote of the people.
SB 5629 by Senators Hargrove, Kohl-Welles, and Darneille; by request of Department of Corrections Awarding positive time credits toward the term of supervision for offenders who are meeting supervision expectations. Authorizes certain offenders to earn positive time for good behavior and good performance, as determined by the department of corrections.
SB 5630 by Senators Cleveland, Conway, Jayapal, Frockt, Keiser, Rolfes, Nelson, McCoy, Pedersen, Hasegawa, Darneille, Chase, Kohl-Welles, Habib, Billig, Fraser, Hatfield, McAuliffe, Hobbs, Ranker, and Liias Enacting the equal pay opportunity act by amending and enhancing enforcement of the equal pay act and protecting worker communications about wages and employment opportunities. Establishes the equal pay opportunity act.Updates the existing state equal pay act to address income disparities, employer discrimination, and retaliation practices.
SB 5631 by Senators Hargrove, O'Ban, Darneille, Pearson, Ranker, Litzow, Rolfes, Jayapal, Liias, Frockt, Dansel, Hill, Fain, Kohl-Welles, Hasegawa, Keiser, Angel, McAuliffe, and Conway Concerning the administration of a statewide network of community-based domestic violence victim services by the department of social and health services. Requires the department of social and health services to develop and maintain a plan for: (1) Delivering domestic violence victim services, prevention efforts, and access to emergency shelter across the state; and(2) Providing a statewide toll-free information and referral hotline or other statewide accessible information and referral service for victims of domestic violence.Increases funding for the domestic violence prevention account.
SB 5632 by Senators Hatfield and Chase; by request of Department of Fish and Wildlife Increasing revenue to the state wildlife account. Increases revenue to the state wildlife account.
SB 5633 by Senators Conway, O'Ban, Hobbs, Chase, Kohl-Welles, Liias, McCoy, and Hatfield Creating a coordinator for the helmets to hardhats program in the department of veterans affairs. Requires the department of veterans affairs to establish procedures for coordinating with the federal helmets to hardhats program.Creates a coordinator for the program.
SB 5634 by Senators Conway, Rolfes, O'Ban, Hobbs, Dammeier, McCoy, Hatfield, and Chase Exempting a widow or widower with gold star license plates from vehicle licensing fees for one motor vehicle. Exempts a widow or widower recipient of a gold star license plate from annual vehicle registration fees and motor vehicle excise taxes for one personal use motor vehicle.
SB 5635 by Senators Pedersen and O'Ban; by request of Uniform Law Commission Enacting the uniform power of attorney act. Repeals chapter 11.94 RCW (power of attorney).Establishes the uniform power of attorney act.
SB 5636 by Senators Hasegawa, Kohl-Welles, Chase, Keiser, and McAuliffe Establishing the GET ready for college program. Creates the GET ready for college program.Requires the office of student financial assistance to pay for the fifty dollar enrollment fee and for one GET unit to open a GET account on behalf of: (1) A child born in this state after the effective date of this act; and(2) A child born after the effective date of this act, who subsequently moves to this state and enrolls in a public school, if one or both of the child's parents or legal guardians have maintained a bona fide domicile in this state for at least one year.Creates the GET ready for college account.
SB 5637 by Senators Hasegawa, Roach, Kohl-Welles, Chase, Keiser, and McAuliffe Creating a peer mentoring program. Requires the six four-year institutions of higher education to: (1) Create and implement a peer mentoring program modeled after the pilot program launched in fall 2009 at Western Washington University; and(2) Working with the state board for community and technical colleges, identify one or more community or technical colleges with which to partner in the program.Revises the definition of "needy student," for purposes of the state work-study program, to include students in the peer mentoring program.Authorizes the office of student financial assistance to award grants to institutions participating in the peer mentoring program.
SB 5638 by Senators Hasegawa, Roach, Kohl-Welles, Chase, Keiser, and McAuliffe Changing state need grant eligibility provisions. Changes eligibility requirements for state need grants.
SB 5639 by Senators Miloscia, Kohl-Welles, Pedersen, Chase, Billig, Hasegawa, Keiser, McAuliffe, and Darneille Reducing criminal justice expenses by eliminating the death penalty in favor of life incarceration. Eliminates the death penalty in favor of life incarceration.
SB 5640 by Senator Ericksen Concerning deficiency claims after auction of a private property vehicle impound. Addresses deficiency claims of registered tow truck operators after auction of a private property vehicle impound.
SB 5641 by Senators Braun and Hatfield Concerning taxation of businesses engaged in radio and television broadcasting. Addresses business and occupation taxes for businesses engaged in radio and television broadcasting.
SB 5642 by Senators Chase, Hill, Kohl-Welles, and McAuliffe Requiring the student achievement council to develop a grant program to encourage training for students studying in the medical field to work with individuals with disabilities. Requires the student achievement council to: (1) Develop a centralized program for grants for institutions for programs designed to develop training projects focused upon improvement of services to adult individuals with developmental disabilities; and(2) Administer the grant program in consultation with the department of health.
SB 5643 by Senators O'Ban, Dammeier, and Darneille Concerning firearms access by a person detained for involuntary mental health treatment. Prevents access of a firearm by a person detained for involuntary mental health treatment.
SB 5644 by Senators O'Ban, Dammeier, and Darneille Concerning psychiatric boarding under the involuntary treatment act. Modifies involuntary treatment act provisions relating to psychiatric boarding.
SB 5645 by Senators Parlette, Cleveland, O'Ban, and Darneille Concerning data reporting concerning the collection of data when a psychiatric patient meets detention criteria and no evaluation and treatment bed is available. Requires a designated mental health professional to make a report to the department of social and health services when he or she determines an individual meets certain detention criteria and: (1) There are no beds available at an evaluation and treatment facility;(2) The individual has not been provisionally accepted for admission by a facility; and(3) The individual cannot be served on a single bed certification or less restrictive alternative.
SB 5646 by Senators Baumgartner and Ericksen Terminating the state route number 99 Alaskan Way viaduct replacement project. Requires the department of transportation to: (1) Terminate the state route number 99 Alaskan Way viaduct replacement project construction contract upon the effective date of this act;(2) Exercise all legal remedies available to cease work on the construction of the deep bore tunnel; and(3) Begin researching construction options to replace or rebuild the viaduct that use the completed portions of the project at the north and south ends of the previous project to the greatest extent possible.
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