The legislature finds that the
state has a vital interest in ensuring that higher education
institutions are maintained in the state in sufficient numbers
and located in such locations, as to be accessible to as many
citizens as possible. Adequate educational opportunities are
essential to the economic, intellectual, and social well-being of
the state and its people. Washington's independently-governed
private nonprofit higher education institutions are a necessary
part of the state's higher educational resources. They provide
educational diversity and choice for all residents of the
communities in which they are located, communities which may not
otherwise be served directly by a public baccalaureate-granting
college or university.
The legislature further finds that some of the factors that
contribute to educational costs are beyond the control of these
higher education institutions and their governing boards. The
factors include the need to modify facilities to render the
facilities accessible to the handicapped or disabled, the necessity of modernizing structures to keep them
safe and efficient, and the demands of energy conservation and
resource utilization. Many of these needs are associated with
the public functions these institutions perform and the
requirements of the state and federal governments. Compounding
the problem is the fact that the cost of these renovations are
borne entirely by the institutions.
Because these institutions serve an important public purpose
addressing both the needs of individuals and the needs of the
state, and because the performance of that public function can be
facilitated at no expense or liability to the state, the
legislature declares it to be the public policy of the state of
Washington to enable the building, providing, and utilization of
modern, well-equipped, efficient, and reasonably priced higher
educational facilities, as well as the improvement, expansion,
and modernization of such facilities, in a manner that will
minimize the capital cost of construction, financing, and use of
such facilities. The intention of this policy is to improve and
ensure the quality and range of educational services available to
the citizens of this state. The intent of the legislature is to
accomplish these and related purposes, and this chapter shall be
liberally construed in order to further these goals.
[1983 c 169 § 1.]