(1) Whenever a regional fire protection service authority
determines that the fire protection jurisdictions that are
members of the authority are not adequately served by existing
private ambulance service, the governing board of the authority
may by resolution provide for the establishment of a system of
ambulance service to be operated by the authority as a public
utility [or] operated by contract after a call for bids.
(2) The legislative authority of any city or town may
establish an ambulance service to be operated as a public
utility. However, the legislative authority of the city or town
shall not provide for the establishment of an ambulance service
utility that would compete with any existing private ambulance
service, unless the legislative authority of the city or town
determines that the city or town, or a substantial portion of the
city or town, is not adequately served by an existing private
ambulance service. In determining the adequacy of an existing
private ambulance service, the legislative authority of the city
or town shall take into consideration objective generally
accepted medical standards and reasonable levels of service which
shall be published by the city or town legislative authority.
The decision of the city council or legislative body shall be a
discretionary, legislative act. When it is preliminarily
concluded that the private ambulance service is inadequate,
before issuing a call for bids or before the city or town
establishes an ambulance service utility, the legislative
authority of the city or town shall allow a minimum of sixty days
for the private ambulance service to meet the generally accepted
medical standards and reasonable levels of service. In the event
of a second preliminary conclusion of inadequacy within a
twenty-four month period, the legislative authority of the city
or town may immediately issue a call for bids or establish an
ambulance service utility and is not required to afford the
private ambulance service another sixty-day period to meet the
generally accepted medical standards and reasonable levels of
service. Nothing in chapter 482, Laws of 2005 is intended to
supersede requirements and standards adopted by the department of
health. A private ambulance service which is not licensed by the
department of health or whose license is denied, suspended, or
revoked shall not be entitled to a sixty-day period within which
to demonstrate adequacy and the legislative authority may
immediately issue a call for bids or establish an ambulance
service utility.
(3) The city or town legislative authority is authorized to
set and collect rates and charges in an amount sufficient to
regulate, operate, and maintain an ambulance utility. Prior to
setting such rates and charges, the legislative authority must
determine, through a cost-of-service study, the total cost
necessary to regulate, operate, and maintain the ambulance
utility. Total costs shall not include capital cost for the
construction, major renovation, or major repair of the physical
plant. Once the legislative authority determines the total
costs, the legislative authority shall then identify that portion
of the total costs that are attributable to the availability of
the ambulance service and that portion of the total costs that
are attributable to the demand placed on the ambulance utility.
(a) Availability costs are those costs attributable to the
basic infrastructure needed to respond to a single call for
service within the utility's response criteria. Availability
costs may include costs for dispatch, labor, training of
personnel, equipment, patient care supplies, and maintenance of
equipment.
(b) Demand costs are those costs that are attributable to
the burden placed on the ambulance service by individual calls
for ambulance service. Demand costs shall include costs related
to frequency of calls, distances from hospitals, and other
factors identified in the cost-of-service study conducted to
assess burdens imposed on the ambulance utility.
(4) A city or town legislative authority is authorized to
set and collect rates and charges as follows:
(a) The rate attributable to costs for availability
described under subsection (3)(a) of this section shall be
uniformly applied across user classifications within the utility;
(b) The rate attributable to costs for demand described
under subsection (3)(b) of this section shall be established and
billed to each utility user classification based on each user
classification's burden on the utility;
(c) The fee charged by the utility shall reflect a
combination of the availability cost and the demand cost;
(d)(i) Except as provided in (d)(ii) of this subsection, the
combined rates charged shall reflect an exemption for persons who
are medicaid eligible and who reside in a nursing facility,
boarding home, adult family home, or receive in-home services.
The combined rates charged may reflect an exemption or reduction
for designated classes consistent with Article VIII, section 7 of
the state Constitution. The amounts of exemption or reduction
shall be a general expense of the utility, and designated as an
availability cost, to be spread uniformly across the utility user
classifications.
(ii) For cities with a population less than two thousand
five hundred that established an ambulance utility before May 6,
2004, the combined rates charged may reflect an exemption or
reduction for persons who are medicaid eligible, and for
designated classes consistent with Article VIII, section 7 of the
state Constitution;
(e) The legislative authority must continue to allocate at
least seventy percent of the total amount of general fund
revenues expended, as of May 5, 2004, toward the total costs
necessary to regulate, operate, and maintain the ambulance
service utility. However, cities or towns that operated an
ambulance service before May 6, 2004, and commingled general fund
dollars and ambulance service dollars, may reasonably estimate
that portion of general fund dollars that were, as of May 5,
2004, applied toward the operation of the ambulance service, and
at least seventy percent of such estimated amount must then
continue to be applied toward the total cost necessary to
regulate, operate, and maintain the ambulance utility. Cities
and towns which first established an ambulance service utility
after May 6, 2004, must allocate, from the general fund or
emergency medical service levy funds, or a combination of both,
at least an amount equal to seventy percent of the total costs
necessary to regulate, operate, and maintain the ambulance
service utility as of May 5, 2004, or the date that the utility
is established;
(f) The legislative authority must allocate available
emergency medical service levy funds, in an amount proportionate
to the percentage of the ambulance service costs to the total
combined operating costs for emergency medical services and
ambulance services, towards the total costs necessary to
regulate, operate, and maintain the ambulance utility;
(g) The legislative authority must allocate all revenues
received through direct billing to the individual user of the
ambulance service to the demand-related costs under subsection
(3)(b) of this section;
(h) The total revenue generated by the rates and charges
shall not exceed the total costs necessary to regulate, operate,
and maintain an ambulance utility; and
(i) Revenues generated by the rates and charges must be
deposited in a separate fund or funds and be used only for the
purpose of paying for the cost of regulating, maintaining, and
operating the ambulance utility.
(5) Ambulance service rates charged pursuant to this section
do not constitute taxes or charges under RCW 82.02.050 through 82.02.090, or 35.21.768, or charges otherwise prohibited by law.
[2005 c 482 § 2; 2004 c 129 § 34; 1975 1st ex.s. c 24 § 1.]
NOTES:
Finding--Intent -- 2005 c 482: "The legislature finds that ambulance and emergency medical services are essential services and the availability of these services is vital to preserving and promoting the health, safety, and welfare of people in local communities throughout the state. All persons, businesses, and industries benefit from the availability of ambulance and emergency medical services, and survival rates can be increased when these services are available, adequately funded, and appropriately regulated. It is the legislature's intent to explicitly recognize local jurisdictions' ability and authority to collect utility service charges to fund ambulance and emergency medical service systems that are based, at least in some part, upon a charge for the availability of these services." [2005 c 482 § 1.]
Captions not law -- Severability -- 2004 c 129: See RCW 52.26.900 and 52.26.901.
Ambulance services by counties authorized: RCW 36.01.100.