PERMANENT RULES
TRAINING COMMISSION
Purpose: WAC 139-05-915 Requirements of training for law enforcement and corrections dog handlers and certification of canine teams, the changes are being made to clarify the standards that must be met for a canine team to become certified.
Citation of Existing Rules Affected by this Order: Amending [WAC 139-05-915].
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 43.101.080.
Adopted under notice filed as WSR 04-16-112 on August 4, 2004.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Comply with Federal Statute: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Federal Rules or Standards: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Recently Enacted State Statutes: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted at Request of a Nongovernmental Entity: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted on the Agency's Own Initiative: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted in Order to Clarify, Streamline, or Reform Agency Procedures: New 0, Amended 1, Repealed 0.
Number of Sections Adopted Using Negotiated Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; Pilot Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0; or Other Alternative Rule Making: New 0, Amended 0, Repealed 0.
Date Adopted: December 8, 2004.
Sharon M. Tolton
Deputy Director
OTS-6985.6
AMENDATORY SECTION(Amending WSR 03-07-100, filed 3/19/03,
effective 4/19/03)
WAC 139-05-915
Requirements of training for law
enforcement and corrections dog handlers and certification of
canine teams.
(1) Title and scope: These rules are intended
to set minimum standards of performance for the certification
of canine teams that are used for law enforcement or
corrections purposes. This process is not related to nor does
it have any effect upon the requirements for peace officer
certification. Nothing in these rules is intended to limit
the use of canine teams employed by other state or federal
agencies for law enforcement purposes, or the use of volunteer
canine teams where the handler is not a Washington peace
officer or corrections officer.
(2) For purposes of this section, the following definitions shall apply:
(a) "Dog handler" means any fully commissioned law
enforcement officer or corrections officer of a state, county,
city, municipality, or combination thereof, agency who is
responsible for the routine care, control, and utilization of
a police ((dog)) canine within a law enforcement or
corrections assignment; and
(b) "Canine team" means a specific officer and a specific
canine controlled by that officer in the capacity of handler,
formally assigned by the employing agency to work together in
the performance of law enforcement((,)) or corrections duties.
(c) "Training" means any structured classroom or
practical learning exercise conducted, evaluated, and
documented by an experienced dog handler or trainer, certified
as an instructor with recognized expertise on canine subjects
associated with the development of the trainee's competency in
the care, control, and utilization of a police ((dog)) canine.
(d) "Evaluator" means a certified peace officer or
corrections officer, who has a minimum of three years
experience as a ((canine)) dog handler and is recognized as a
trainer of canines by a professional organization of police
and/or corrections ((canine)) dog handlers/trainers or by the
handler's employing agency. The trainer must have trained a
canine team in accordance with the training requirements of
WAC 139-05-915, or be recognized by the commission as a
certified instructor with expertise in canine training of a
specific police canine subject for the purpose of testing and
certifying ((canine)) dog handlers and ((dogs)) canines to
work as a canine team.
(3) A dog handler shall, as a precondition of such
assignment, successfully complete the basic law enforcement
academy ((program,)) or basic corrections officer academy, or
otherwise comply with the basic training requirement
prescribed by WAC 139-05-200 and 139-05-210 of the training
commission.
(4) Prior to((, or within the first six months of)) such
assignment, a dog handler shall successfully complete training
according to the nature and purpose of utilization of the
police ((dog)) canine for which such handler is responsible.
(a) A dog handler who is responsible for the routine and
regular utilization of a police ((dog)) canine within general
patrol or investigative activities, shall successfully
complete a minimum of four hundred hours of training, which
shall include, but not be limited to:
(i) Philosophies/theories of police canine;
(ii) Legal and liability aspects, including applicable department policies;
(iii) Public relations;
(iv) Care and maintenance;
(v) Obedience and control;
(vi) Tracking;
(vii) Trailing;
(viii) Area ((searching)) search;
(ix) Building ((searching)) search;
(x) Evidence ((searching)) search;
(xi) Pursuit((/)) and holding; and
(xii) Master protection.
(b) A dog handler who is responsible for the primary and
specialized utilization of a police ((dog)) canine in the
search for and detection of specific substances, excluding
explosives, shall successfully complete a minimum of two
hundred hours of training, which shall include, but not be
limited to:
(i) Philosophies/theories of police canine;
(ii) Legal and liability aspects, including applicable department policies;
(iii) Public relations;
(iv) Care and maintenance;
(v) Obedience and control;
(vi) Area ((searching)) search;
(vii) Building ((searching)) search;
(viii) Evidence ((searching)) search; ((and))
(ix) Vehicle search; and
(x) Detection of specific substances.
(c) A dog handler who is responsible for the primary and
specialized utilization of a police ((dog)) canine in the
search for and detection of explosive substances and devices,
shall successfully complete a minimum of ((two)) four hundred
hours of training, which shall include, but not be limited to:
(i) Philosophies/theories of police canine;
(ii) Legal and liability aspects, including applicable department policies;
(iii) Public relations;
(iv) Care and maintenance;
(v) Obedience and control;
(vi) Area ((searching)) search;
(vii) Private and commercial conveyance search;
(viii) Building ((searching)) search;
(((viii))) (ix) Evidence ((searching)) search; and
(((iv))) (x) Detection of explosives.
(d) A dog handler who is responsible for the routine and
regular utilization of a police ((dog)) canine solely for
self-protection and assistance in hostile or potentially
hostile situations, shall successfully complete at least ((one
hundred eighty)) two hundred hours of training, which shall
include, but not be limited to:
(i) Philosophies/theories of police canine;
(ii) Legal and liability aspects, including applicable department policies;
(iii) Public relations;
(iv) Care and maintenance;
(v) Obedience and control;
(vi) Pursuit((/)) and holding; and
(vii) Master protection.
(5) The commission shall develop and adopt a minimum
performance standard for canine teams performing specific law
enforcement or corrections functions. It shall be the
handler's responsibility to keep their canines under control
at all times. Each handler must be able to make ((his/her))
their canine perform to a level that is deemed acceptable by
the commission in the category for the team's intended use as
a condition of certification.
(6) Certification of canine teams:
(a) The handler and the canine will be considered as a
team and it is the team who will be certified. If the canine
((changes)) or the handler((s)) changes, a new team exists and
the team ((will need to)) must be certified.
(b) A dog handler may not use a canine for police purposes unless the handler is certified to handle a specific canine for a specific purpose.
(c) In evaluating the proficiency of the canine team, the evaluators shall use the standards approved by the commission for that particular skill category. Performance shall be rated on a pass/fail basis. The evaluator shall have the discretion to discontinue the testing if excessive time has been spent without results, or if there is a concern about safety issues involving the canine, handler, or equipment.
(d) The commission shall certify a canine team who can
successfully show proficiency, under scrutiny of a canine
evaluator, in ((one or more)) all of the ((following)) areas
((of patrol and investigation/or detection.)) in which the
canine will be used:
(i) Patrol and investigation:
(A) Obedience;
(B) Protection and control;
(C) Area search;
(D) Building search; and
(E) Tracking.
(ii) Detection:
(A) Building((s)) search;
(B) Vehicle((s)) search;
(C) Exterior search; and
(D) Obedience((; and
(E) Building search)).
(iii) ((Expiration of certification:)) Explosive
detection:
(A) Obedience;
(B) Building search;
(C) Private and commercial conveyance search;
(D) Exterior search.
(iv) Master protection:
(A) Obedience;
(B) Protection and control.
(e) Each certification issued pursuant to these rules
shall remain valid as long as the composition and
responsibility of the canine team does not change. A canine
team's certification shall ((lapse)) expire if the specific
handler and canine, originally paired at the time of
certification, cease to perform canine team functions together
or if the function for which the team was certified changes. It is recommended that teams recertify on an annual basis.
(((iv) Failure to pass certification:)) (f) If the canine
team fails any phase of an evaluation, ((he/she)) the team
must be reevaluated in that particular phase. Canine teams
will be allowed three attempts to successfully pass the
requirements of each phase during an evaluation. If the team
does not pass by the third attempt, the team shall be
reevaluated in all phases at a different time to be scheduled
by the evaluator and approved by the commission.
(((v) Appeal:)) (g) Any handler who believes there
((have)) has been improper procedures applied in the testing
process, may file an appeal with the commission in writing. This appeal must be filed within thirty days of the last
testing date pursuant to WAC 139-03-020.
(7) ((Agency required to keep records:)) Recordkeeping:
(a) Each agency shall be required to keep training
((and)), performance, and identification records on canines. The records must stay with the agency responsible for the
canine team. The records shall be made available for review
in the event that the canine is sold or transferred to another
agency. The records shall include((, at a minimum)), but not
be limited to:
(i) Microchip number (if applicable);
(ii) Canine's name;
(iii) Breed;
(iv) Training ((received)) records;
(v) Certification date;
(vi) Date acquired or purchased;
(vii) Source from which the canine was acquired;
(viii) Purpose, use, or assignment of canine;
(ix) Handler's name;
(x) The date and reason the canine was released from service; and
(xi) Copies of all incident reports in which use of the canine resulted in the use of force.
(b) These records shall be retained for a period of one year from the date the canine is removed from active service unless a longer retention is required by statute or local ordinance.
(c) It shall be the responsibility of the handler to
advise ((his/her)) their employing agency of the fact that
((he/she has)) they have met the standards for canine
certification. The proof of certification with the
evaluator's signature along with a request for canine
certification shall be submitted to the commission by the
employing agency. This shall be considered as a request for
certification. Upon verification that the minimum
requirements have been met, the commission shall issue ((a
certificate of)) certification to the canine team.
(8) ((Canine recommended to be microchipped:
(a))) It is recommended that a canine intended ((to be
used)) for use by a law enforcement or corrections agency, be
positively identified by having a microchip medically inserted
in the canine. Any canine that is sold by a vendor to a
Washington state governmental agency for use as a law
enforcement or corrections canine should be able to be
identified by microchip placed in the canine at the vendor's
expense prior to the canine being sold to the law enforcement
or corrections agency.
(((b))) Once the microchip has been inserted, it is
recommended that it not be removed except for medical
necessity. If it becomes necessary to remove the microchip,
the reason for the removal must be documented and entered into
the ((dog's)) canine's training records((,)) and a new
microchip inserted, if medically appropriate.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 43.101.080. 03-07-100, § 139-05-915, filed 3/19/03, effective 4/19/03; 00-17-017, § 139-05-915, filed 8/4/00, effective 9/4/00. Statutory Authority: RCW 43.101.080(2). 86-19-021 (Order 1-B), § 139-05-915, filed 9/10/86.]