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=2017. HB 1022-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representatives MacEwen, Pettigrew, and Haler) Enhancing crime victim participation in the criminal justice system process. Establishes the safety and access for immigrant victims act.Requires certain entities and law enforcement agencies to complete victim certifications for nonimmigrant visa applications for qualifying victims.Requires the office of crime victims advocacy to convene a crime victim certification steering committee and provide administrative support for the committee.Requires the criminal justice training commission, in collaboration with the office of crime victims advocacy and the crime victim certification steering committee, to develop and adopt minimum standards for a course of study on certain nonimmigrant visas, other legal protections for immigrant survivors of criminal activity, and promising practices in working with immigrant crime victims.
HB 1113-S by House Committee on Appropriations (originally sponsored by Representatives Hayes, Senn, Nealey, Appleton, Shea, Goodman, McCaslin, Wylie, Stokesbary, Peterson, Wilcox, Springer, Griffey, Ryu, Hargrove, Robinson, Vick, Ortiz-Self, Fey, Tharinger, Buys, Orwall, Harmsworth, Pike, Farrell, McBride, Stambaugh, Clibborn, Gregerson, Holy, Kloba, Stanford, Muri, Sells, McDonald, and Bergquist) Concerning gradually increasing the local government share of excess liquor revenues until the percentage-based method for distributions is restored. Removes the statutory cap on excess liquor revenues and gradually returns the distributions to cities and counties to the percentage amounts before Initiative Measure No. 1183.
HB 1126-S by House Committee on Commerce & Gaming (originally sponsored by Representatives Condotta, Sawyer, and Vick) Establishing a deadline for the use and implementation of a marijuana retail license by a licensee. Requires the state liquor and cannabis board to adopt rules to establish a license forfeiture process for a licensed marijuana retailer that is not fully operational and open to the public within a specified period from the date of license issuance, subject to certain restrictions.
HB 1170-S by House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Goodman, Kilduff, Rodne, Muri, Jinkins, Fey, Pollet, and Santos) Maintaining and facilitating court-based and school-based efforts to promote attendance and reduce truancy. Promotes attendance and reduces truancy by maintaining and facilitating court-based and school-based efforts.
HB 1171-S by House Committee on Environment (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Fitzgibbon, Gregerson, Tarleton, Pollet, and Santos) Directing the completion of a study of certain environmental impacts, including ultrafine particulate emissions, associated with aircraft traffic in areas impacted by airport operations. Requires the department of commerce, in consultation with the department of health and the department of ecology, to complete a study regarding air quality implications of air traffic at the international airport in this state with the highest number of total annual departures and arrivals.Requires the University of Washington to complete an assessment of the concentrations of ultrafine particulate matter, barium, aluminum, radioactive thorium, cadmium, chromium, and ethylene dibromide in areas surrounding and directly impacted by air traffic generated by the airport.Expires June 30, 2022.
HB 1176-S by House Committee on Commerce & Gaming (originally sponsored by Representative Muri) Concerning the alcoholic beverage mead. Prohibits the agricultural commodity assessment amounts from being levied on the production of mead.Allows a licensee holding a license that permits, or a license with an endorsement that permits, the sale of beer to a purchaser in a container supplied by the licensee or a sanitary container brought to the premises by the purchaser and filled at the tap at the time of sale may similarly sell mead in a container.Requires mead sold, pursuant to this act, to have an alcohol content equal to or less than fourteen percent alcohol by volume.
HB 1200-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representatives McCabe, Goodman, Klippert, Orwall, Hayes, Johnson, Griffey, Caldier, Dye, Sells, McDonald, Kilduff, and Smith) Concerning the crime of voyeurism. Establishes the crime of voyeurism in the second degree which is a gross misdemeanor.Requires a prosecutor, where a case is legally sufficient to charge an alleged offender with voyeurism in the second degree and the alleged offense is the offender's first voyeurism in the second degree offense, to divert the case, unless the offender has received two diversions for any offense in the previous two years.
HB 1235-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Riccelli, Harris, Stonier, Bergquist, Caldier, Robinson, Nealey, Stokesbary, Jinkins, McBride, Goodman, Ryu, Frame, Gregerson, Dolan, and Ormsby) Assessing physical education practices in public schools. Requires school districts to: (1) Conduct an annual review of their physical education programs; and(2) Submit the results of the review to the district's wellness committee and to the office of the superintendent of public instruction.Requires the office of the superintendent of public instruction to aggregate and analyze the data, summarize the information provided by each district, and post the summarized information on its web site.Requires the K-12 data governance group to develop data protocols and guidance for school districts in the collection of the data.
HB 1251-S by House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Frame, Rodne, Goodman, Stokesbary, Jinkins, Haler, Kagi, Muri, Reeves, Tarleton, Kilduff, Appleton, Ormsby, Senn, Blake, McBride, Fey, Doglio, Ryu, Pollet, Dolan, Gregerson, and Bergquist) Concerning the appointment of counsel for youth in dependency court proceedings. Gives a child the right to be represented by counsel at all stages of a proceeding in which the child is alleged to be dependent.Requires the court to appoint an attorney for a child in a dependency proceeding six months after granting a petition to terminate the parent and child relationship and when there is no remaining parent with parental rights.Provides a schedule for phase in of court appointment of an attorney for every child over the age of two in a dependency proceeding.
HB 1279-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representative Pettigrew) Concerning school safety drills. Requires school principals and administrators to assess the threats and hazards most likely to impact their school and practice the following basic functional drills: Shelter-in-place, lockdown, and evacuation, as these drills relate to those threats and hazards.Requires schools to conduct at least one of those safety-related drills per month, including summer months when school is in session.
HB 1303-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Stambaugh, Bergquist, Stokesbary, Stonier, Muri, Young, and Senn) Concerning educational interpreters. Revises professional educator standards board provisions regarding evaluations and assessments for educational interpreters for which the board has not established a performance standard; and educational interpreters who have not successfully achieved the performance standard.
HB 1319-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives McCaslin, Bergquist, Holy, Ryu, Stokesbary, Orwall, Volz, Haler, Stambaugh, Griffey, Chandler, Blake, Dent, McDonald, Dolan, Shea, Koster, Short, Pettigrew, Fey, Santos, Smith, Hargrove, Sells, Pollet, Muri, and Young) Concerning the frequency of evaluations for certain educators. Requires certain classroom teachers and principals to receive an annual comprehensive summative evaluation every six years.
HB 1321-S by House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representatives Jenkin, Appleton, Nealey, and Gregerson) Authorizing certain public facilities districts to acquire, construct, own, remodel, maintain, equip, reequip, repair, finance, and operate one or more recreational facilities other than a ski area with voter approval. Prohibits a public facilities district, created by a city or town bordered by both the Columbia and Snake rivers, from making a facility, constructed after the effective date of this act, available to a prospective user for an event that is not open to the public if reasonably comparable private facilities are available within the boundaries of the public facilities district.Allows a facility to include only equipment, amenities, and operations directly related to the primary function of the facility.Includes aquatics facilities in the definition of "regional center," for purposes of chapter 35.57 RCW (public facilities districts).
HB 1346-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Springer, Muri, Dolan, Harris, Appleton, Tarleton, Cody, Santos, and Ortiz-Self) Clarifying the authority of a nurse working in a school setting. Allows only a registered nurse or an advanced registered nurse practitioner to supervise, direct, or evaluate a licensed nurse working in a school setting with respect to the practice of nursing.Allows school administrators to supervise a registered nurse or an advanced registered nurse practitioner in aspects of employment other than the practice of nursing.
HB 1347-S by House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representatives Riccelli, Holy, and Ormsby) Concerning the creation of a countywide port district within a county containing no port districts. Authorizes a county with no port district to create, by a ballot proposition, a port district coextensive with the limits of the county.Expires December 31, 2020.
HB 1351-S by House Committee on Commerce & Gaming (originally sponsored by Representatives Sawyer, Vick, Springer, Barkis, Blake, Fitzgibbon, and Haler) Authorizing, under one license, the sale of spirits, beer, and wine at retail for off-premises consumption. Creates a combination spirits, beer, and wine license that allows the sale of wine and beer, including without limitation strong beer, at retail in bottles, cans, and original containers.
HB 1377-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Ortiz-Self, Stonier, Santos, Lovick, Gregerson, Peterson, Ryu, Appleton, Fitzgibbon, Goodman, Bergquist, and Doglio) Improving students' mental health by enhancing nonacademic professional services. Addresses the role of a school counselor, a school social worker, and a school psychologist in promoting student achievement and creating a safe learning environment.Requires first-class school districts to provide at least six hours of professional collaboration per year for school counselors, social workers, and psychologists that focuses on recognizing signs of emotional or behavioral distress in students.Creates the professional collaboration lighthouse grant program to assist school districts with early adoption and implementation of mental health professional collaboration time.Requires the superintendent of public instruction to designate two school districts as lighthouse school districts to serve as resources and examples of best practices in designing and operating a professional collaboration program for school counselors, social workers, and psychologists, and local licensed mental health service providers.Requires the professional educator standards board to convene a task force on school counselors, psychologists, and social workers to review certain issues.
HB 1379-S by House Committee on Higher Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Stambaugh, Blake, Holy, Pollet, Tarleton, Haler, Sells, Goodman, Lovick, Frame, Kilduff, Doglio, and Stanford) Implementing a comprehensive approach to suicide prevention and behavioral health in higher education. Repeals the July 2017 expiration date for the mental health and suicide prevention in higher education task force and provides a new July 2019 expiration date for the task force.Declares an intent to implement task force recommendations.Requires the department of health to: (1) In collaboration with the student achievement council, develop a statewide resource for behavioral health and suicide prevention for postsecondary institutions; and(2) Establish the components of the statewide resource by working with the task force and other entities or persons that the department and the task force deem appropriate.Creates the suicide prevention in higher education grant program to provide funding for postsecondary institutions to develop basic infrastructure and strategic plans to support behavioral health promotion and suicide prevention.Requires postsecondary institutions to submit a report to the department of health to establish a baseline for behavioral health concerns and responses at the institutions of higher education.
HB 1405-S by House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Harmsworth, Bergquist, Orcutt, Rodne, Muri, Chandler, Stokesbary, Pollet, Stanford, Kilduff, and Springer) Establishing a statute of limitation for toll collections. Requires certain entities to issue a toll bill within six months of the date of occurrence of the toll transaction for which the toll bill is issued.Prohibits the same entities from assessing further penalties, fines, or costs or taking further action to collect a toll or associated penalties, fines, or costs unless the initial toll bill has been issued within six months of that particular transaction.
HB 1444-S by House Committee on Education (originally sponsored by Representatives Caldier, Santos, Kilduff, Muri, Senn, Appleton, Fey, Pollet, and Slatter) Facilitating on-time grade level progression and graduation for certain students. Requires a school district to incorporate certain procedures to facilitate on-time grade level progression and graduation of students who are at-risk youth or children in need of services or homeless.Authorizes a school district of origin or of residence to enroll a high school student, who changes residence mid-term, in online courses or school programs for the remainder of the academic term.Requires a receiving school district to waive local requirements and ensure the receipt of a diploma if a student has enrolled in three or more school districts as a high school student and met state requirements but is ineligible to graduate from the receiving school district.
HB 1464-S by House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Blake, Orcutt, Chapman, and Tarleton; by request of Department of Fish and Wildlife) Concerning the development of cooperative agreements to expand recreational access on privately owned lands. Provides immunity from liability, for unintentional injuries to a volunteer group or other users, to a landowner who is in lawful possession and control of lands, or water areas or channels and lands adjacent to the areas or channels, who enters into a public access agreement with the department of fish and wildlife and does not charge an access fee.
HB 1467-S by House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representatives Stokesbary, Peterson, Griffey, Robinson, Muri, McBride, Rodne, Fitzgibbon, and Tharinger) Removing disincentives to the voluntary formation of regional fire protection service authorities by establishing parity, equalizing certain provisions with existing laws governing fire protection districts, and clarifying the formation process. Revises regional fire protection service authority provisions as follows: (1) Removes disincentives to the voluntary formation of the authorities by establishing parity;(2) Equalizes certain provisions with existing laws governing fire protection districts; and(3) Clarifies the formation process.
HB 1491-S by House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services (originally sponsored by Representatives Orwall, Hargrove, Sullivan, Gregerson, Slatter, and Kagi) Concerning pediatric transitional care services. Addresses an establishment that provides pediatric transitional care services to drug exposed infants and requires the establishment to demonstrate that it is capable of providing services for children who: (1) Are no more than one year of age;(2) Have been exposed to drugs before birth;(3) Require twenty-four hour continuous residential care and skilled nursing services as a result of prenatal substance exposure; and(4) Are referred to the establishment by the department of social and health services, regional hospitals, and private parties.Requires the secretary of the department of health, in consultation with the department of social and health services, to adopt rules on pediatric transitional care services.
HB 1495-S by House Committee on Local Government (originally sponsored by Representatives Fey, Muri, Sawyer, Sells, Jinkins, and Doglio) Incentivizing the development of commercial office space in cities with a population of greater than fifty thousand and located in a county with a population of less than one million five hundred thousand. Provides certain cities with local options to incentivize the development of commercial office space in urban centers with access to transit, high capacity transportation systems, and other amenities.Authorizes a governing authority of a city to adopt a local sales and use tax exemption program or a local property tax exemption program to incentivize the development of commercial office space in urban centers with access to transit, high capacity transportation systems, and other amenities.
HB 1502-S by House Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Representatives Chapman, Orcutt, Lovick, Rodne, Clibborn, and Tharinger; by request of Department of Transportation) Concerning the authorization of and deposit of moneys from department of transportation advertising activities. Authorizes the department of transportation to: (1) Sell commercial advertising, including product placement, on department web sites and social media; and(2) Sell a version of its mobile application to users who desire to have access to an application without advertising.Requires the department to deposit money received from the sale of advertisements on web site and mobile applications into the motor vehicle fund.
HB 1591-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representatives Klippert and Hayes) Increasing the punishment for vehicular assault. Addresses the offender score with regard to vehicular assault while driving under the influence.
HB 1614-S by House Committee on Public Safety (originally sponsored by Representatives Goodman, Klippert, Orwall, Hayes, Pellicciotti, Holy, Griffey, Pettigrew, Muri, and Haler) Concerning impaired driving. Modifies impaired driving provisions.
HB 1740-S by House Committee on Environment (originally sponsored by Representatives McBride, Fey, and Jinkins) Using the state environmental policy act to encourage development that is consistent with forward-looking growth plans. Changes the time frame in which a proposed development may not be challenged in administrative or judicial appeals for noncompliance with the state environmental policy act.Authorizes money in the growth management planning and environmental review fund to be used to cover costs associated with the adoption of optional elements of comprehensive plans consistent with provisions of the state environmental policy act.
HB 1819-S by House Committee on Early Learning & Human Services (originally sponsored by Representatives Dent, Senn, Kagi, Griffey, Johnson, and McBride) Reducing certain documentation and paperwork requirements in order to improve children's mental health and safety. Requires the department of social and health services to immediately perform a review of its rules, policies, and procedures related to the documentation requirements for behavioral health services with regard to individual initial assessments to identify areas in which duplicative or inefficient documentation requirements can be eliminated or streamlined for providers.
HJM 4007-S by House Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Representatives Muri, Ryu, Appleton, Sells, Kilduff, Lovick, and Barkis) Requesting that the Interstate 5 bridges over the Nisqually River be named for and recognize the veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts. Requests that the Interstate 5 bridges over the Nisqually River be named for and recognize the veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts.
SB 5123-S by Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senators Warnick and Chase) Exempting short-line railroads that haul nonfuel oils from oil spill contingency planning requirements. Exempts the transport by a class III railroad of oil in bulk that is not crude oil or is not a refined petroleum product used for fuel from the contingency plan requirements for railroads transporting oil in bulk.
SB 5135-S by Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Trade & Economic Development (originally sponsored by Senators Rivers, Rolfes, Zeiger, Walsh, Angel, Keiser, Mullet, Cleveland, Hunt, Bailey, King, Warnick, Brown, Fain, Ranker, Van De Wege, Conway, and Wellman) Modifying the Washington main street program by increasing the total amount of tax credits allowed under the program and making administrative changes to the program. Increases the total amount of tax credits allowed under the Washington main street program and makes administrative changes to the program.
SB 5152-S by Senate Committee on Health Care (originally sponsored by Senators Fain, Keiser, Rivers, Becker, Palumbo, and Kuderer) Concerning pediatric transitional care services. Addresses an establishment that provides pediatric transitional care services to drug exposed infants and requires the establishment to demonstrate that it is capable of providing services for children who: (1) Are no more than one year of age;(2) Have been exposed to drugs before birth;(3) Require twenty-four hour continuous residential care and skilled nursing services as a result of prenatal substance exposure; and(4) Are referred to the establishment by the department of social and health services, regional hospitals, and private parties.Requires the secretary of the department of health, in consultation with the department of social and health services, to adopt rules on pediatric transitional care services.
SB 5170-S by Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senator Ericksen) Concerning independent remedial actions under the model toxics control act. Revises the model toxics control act to address independent remedial actions.
SB 5239-S by Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Trade & Economic Development (originally sponsored by Senators Warnick, Takko, Ericksen, Becker, Walsh, Angel, Wilson, Schoesler, Honeyford, Pearson, Brown, and Padden) Ensuring that water is available to support development. Includes the following as an option of providing evidence of an adequate water supply when applying for a building permit: A water well report for a groundwater withdrawal exempt from permitting that is not prohibited by an applicable water resources management rule.Authorizes a county or city to: (1) Impose conditions on building permits requiring connection to certain existing public water systems; and(2) In providing for the protection of the quantity of groundwater used for public water supplies, rely on or refer to applicable water resources management rules.Authorizes certain local governments, in approving a subdivision, dedication, or short subdivision, to rely on or refer to applicable water resources management rules to determine if appropriate provisions have been made for potable water supplies.Requires a permit to make beneficial use of public waters to be conditioned to mitigate impacts to fish or aquatic resources.Directs the department of ecology to: (1) In areas where it has adopted a rule setting minimum flows or levels, establish a program, under certain circumstances, to mitigate the cumulative impacts of withdrawals for domestic uses that are exempt from permitting; and(2) Upon written request by a county legislative authority, allow certain counties to administer the watershed-based exempt well mitigation program for that area.
SB 5300-S by Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Trade & Economic Development (originally sponsored by Senators Zeiger, Wellman, Fain, Billig, Walsh, Nelson, and Hasegawa) Authorizing specified local governments to designate a portion of their territory as a creative district subject to certification by the Washington state arts commission. Authorizes a local government to designate a creative district within its territorial boundaries subject to certification as a state-certified creative district by the state arts commission.Authorizes the state arts commission to create a process for review of applications submitted by local governments or federally recognized Indian tribes for certification of state-certified creative districts.
SB 5324-S by Senate Committee on Agriculture, Water, Trade & Economic Development (originally sponsored by Senators Takko and Rivers; by request of Department of Agriculture) Adding authority to the department of agriculture to regulate sanitary processing of marijuana-infused edibles. Requires the department of agriculture to regulate marijuana-infused edible processing the same as other food processing under the state food processing act.Requires a marijuana processor that processes, packages, or makes marijuana-infused edibles to obtain an annual marijuana-infused edible endorsement.
SB 5338-S by Senate Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Senators Wilson and Takko) Concerning registration enforcement for off-road vehicles and snowmobiles. States that it is a gross misdemeanor for a resident to register an off-road vehicle or a snowmobile in another state, or to hold a manufacturer's statement of origin and not apply for a Washington state certificate of title for the off-road vehicle, or not register the snowmobile in this state, within fifteen days of having the off-road vehicle or snowmobile brought to this state, to avoid the payment of a tax or license fee imposed in this state.Requires motorsports vehicle manufacturers to report to the department of licensing a listing of motorsports vehicle warranties for off-road vehicles and snowmobiles registered to this state's residents but sold by out-of-state motorsports vehicle dealers in the previous calendar year.
SB 5349-S by Senate Committee on Health Care (originally sponsored by Senators Cleveland, Billig, Rivers, Conway, Keiser, Saldaña, Hasegawa, Frockt, and Kuderer) Concerning elder justice centers. Requires the department of social and health services to establish elder justice center demonstration programs to be operated in counties with a population of between four and five hundred thousand.
SB 5402-S by Senate Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Senators Liias, Walsh, Billig, Hobbs, King, and Sheldon) Creating the Cooper Jones bicyclist safety advisory council. Requires the traffic safety commission to convene the Cooper Jones bicyclist safety advisory council to review and analyze data related to bicyclist fatalities and serious injuries to identify points at which the transportation system can be improved and to identify patterns in bicyclist fatalities and serious injuries.Expires June 30, 2019.
SB 5438-S by Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senators Braun, Angel, Bailey, Rivers, Becker, O'Ban, Schoesler, Brown, Warnick, King, Honeyford, Fortunato, Baumgartner, Rossi, Sheldon, Wilson, and Takko) Promoting the completion of environmental impact statements within two years. Requires a lead agency to aspire to prepare a final environmental impact statement in as expeditious a manner as possible while not compromising the integrity of the analysis.
SB 5458-S by Senate Committee on Law & Justice (originally sponsored by Senator Takko) Changing the date in which community impact statements are provided to the department of corrections. Changes the time frame in which community impact statements are provided to the department of corrections.
SB 5470-S by Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senators Brown, Hobbs, Rivers, Becker, Takko, Ericksen, Honeyford, and Schoesler) Advancing the development of renewable energy by improving the permitting process for geothermal resources exploration. Improves the permitting process for geothermal resources exploration to advance the development of renewable energy.Requires the department of natural resources, upon receipt of a proper application relating to drilling, to review the application as the lead agency under the state environmental policy act, if applicable.
SB 5475-S by Senate Committee on Energy, Environment & Telecommunications (originally sponsored by Senators Brown, Baumgartner, Rivers, Takko, King, Sheldon, Bailey, Ericksen, Angel, Honeyford, Miloscia, Becker, Braun, Hobbs, and Schoesler) Providing a business and occupation tax exemption for manufacturers of small modular reactors. Exempts the following from business and occupation taxes: A person engaging in the business of manufacturing small modular reactors or making sales at wholesale or retail of small modular reactors manufactured by that person.
SB 5508-S by Senate Committee on Transportation (originally sponsored by Senators Hawkins, Liias, Fortunato, O'Ban, Saldaña, King, Sheldon, and Hobbs) Authorizing two-year registration periods for certain vehicles and vessels while maintaining existing annual registration fee amounts. Allows a person to designate a two-year registration when registering a vehicle or vessel that is eligible for a two-year registration period.
SB 5514-S by Senate Committee on Health Care (originally sponsored by Senators Rivers, Cleveland, and Keiser; by request of Department of Health) Concerning rapid health information network data reporting. Requires the department of health to require hospitals with emergency departments to submit emergency department patient care information, which must be collected, maintained, analyzed, and disseminated by the department.
SB 5552-S by Senate Committee on Law & Justice (originally sponsored by Senators Pedersen, Zeiger, Frockt, Takko, O'Ban, Fain, and Hobbs) Concerning firearms sales and transfers. Exempts the following from the definition of "firearm" for purposes of chapter 9.41 RCW (firearms and dangerous weapons): A flare gun or other pyrotechnic visual distress signaling device, or a powder-actuated tool or other device designed solely to be used for construction purposes.Exempts the following from the definition of "transfer" for purposes of chapter 9.41 RCW (firearms and dangerous weapons): The delivery of a firearm owned or leased by an entity licensed or qualified to do business in the state to, or return of the firearm by, any of that entity's employees or agents for lawful purposes in the ordinary course of business.Exempts a temporary transfer of possession of a firearm from background checks and other firearm-related requirements if: (1) The transfer is intended to prevent suicide or self-inflicted great bodily harm;(2) The transfer lasts only as long as reasonably necessary to prevent death or great bodily harm;(3) The firearm is not used by the transferee for any purpose for the duration of the temporary transfer;(4) The transferee and the firearm remain in the presence of the transferor; or(5) The transferee is a licensed collector and the firearm being transferred is a curio or relic.
SB 5580-S by Senate Committee on Human Services, Mental Health & Housing (originally sponsored by Senator O'Ban; by request of Department of Social and Health Services) Concerning professionals qualified to examine individuals in the mental health and substance use disorder treatment systems. Authorizes a chemical dependency professional to sign a petition for chemical dependency involuntary treatment.
SB 5844 by Senator Braun Adopting citizen commission 2016 recommendations and making adjustments to the commission's review process. Repeals certain tax exemptions, credits, and incentives regarding: (1) Semiconductor materials manufacturing;(2) Gases and chemicals used to manufacture semiconductor materials;(3) Semiconductor microchips; and(4) Semiconductor microchip fabrication facility siting and operation.Requires the citizen commission for performance measurement of tax preferences to include a review of tax preferences that have a statutory expiration date at least one year before the expiration of the tax preference.Authorizes the joint legislative audit and review committee, in reviewing tax preferences, to use a different economic model if that model is approved by the committee and the office of financial management as a more relevant economic model than the input-output model.Requires the committee to, for each tax preference that does not have statutory metrics or accountability standards associated with the tax preference, recommend to the legislature statutory metrics or accountability standards that will help determine the effectiveness of the tax preference in a future review.
|